This video analyzes how David Wilcock's delusional belief system, which included claims of being a reincarnated Jesus figure, talking to Archangel Michael, and investing millions in fraudulent companies, contributed to his mental health crisis and eventual suicide. The analysis demonstrates how individuals with grandiose delusions can become increasingly isolated, financially vulnerable, and disconnected from reality, ultimately leading to tragic outcomes. The hosts emphasize that Wilcock was not a liar but rather 'the world's most gullible boy' who believed everything he was told, making him vulnerable to exploitation by those who preyed on his beliefs.
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The Greatest Showman w/ Hidden in Plain SightAdded:
Top Lopsson Productions of the St. When the last trumpet sounds and the heavens crack.
That's why Welcome back ladies and gentlemen to another episode of Nephilim Death Squad.
I am David Lee Corbo aka the Raven >> starting already.
>> That's Top Lobster, the father of disinformation.
>> [ __ ] nervous out here dog.
>> Before we get into today's guest, a little reminder if you're looking for a place to support us, patreon.com squad is a really, really, really good place to support us guys. You gain early access to episodes before the general public, unedited versions. Uh, also, well, I guess it's everywhere now. Yeah, >> but uh Bohemian Grove tickets are currently available. The general admission Bohemian all the all the VIP tickets are sold out. So the disgusting pores will never see them.
>> They sold out in two days and we waited five more to sell to you [ __ ] poor people.
>> That's right. Actually, they sold out in less than two days. Under 48 hours. Um and now now the the filthy pores can have them. So you get those over at top lobster.com. Go get your Bohemian Grove tickets. You know what's fantastic? We haven't even announced the lineup and we're already moving so many of these tickets and that makes me feel good because this one was supposed to be about Nephilim Death Squad and the friends of the show. We weren't going to have big heavy hitters. We weren't going to try to, you know, get you guys to come out for some celebrities. We're going to come come out for some retards.
>> That's really [ __ ] insulting to say when we have some really great guests coming up.
>> That's true. Well, they're not celebrities and they're but they are retards.
>> Yes.
>> Welcome back to the show, guys.
Joining us once again are the guys from Hidden in Plain Sight. This is a really fantastic episode and I'm excited to talk about this. Is a large hole has been left in our hearts. Roughly the size of a of a great forehead, a large forehead. Um, but before we even talk about this, let's talk about where the people can find Hidden in Plain Sight.
>> Sure. You can find us Hidden in Plain Sight Radio on YouTube. hidden uh just hidden in plain sight on all the podcast apps at the hiddenpod on Twitter, hidden plainsight radio on Instagram and patreon.com/hiddenplainsight pod >> and the Boulder uh uh police police department if some people get their way >> and soon to be investigated by detectives.
>> I don't think you guys had had anything to do with this. I want to say before we even get into it that I I watched your episode cuz immediately this is how how >> unique your relationship is with David Wilcock is when David Wilcock dies I go what are the hidden in plain sight I literally the first people I talked to about it were you guys in fact you broke the news to me >> and all I could think about was how this affects you >> well that's all I could think about and I was like well this is going to ruin our performance now great >> I think it makes it better. Um, I so I watched your perform or your your episode about him. Honestly, guys, it's a fantastic episode and I' I've heard people unironically say >> that >> the the only people that really cared about David Wilco were the guys from Hidden in Plain Sight. So, uh, you know, >> I guess we tried to save him, but our efforts were in vain, I guess, cuz he swallowed a [ __ ] >> Yeah. Was it?
>> He ascended his brains all over the side of his house.
>> Yeah. Boy, did he look. He flew in a way.
>> He reached the dancer. I guess >> your brain becomes [ __ ] liquid. It's [ __ ] grim, guys.
>> They killed my baby, Mr. Top. They killed my baby. They took my baby from >> That's what I'm saying. I know that I know it weighs heavy on you guys, and this is this is clear. This is evident.
Um, you know, David Wilco was a guy we've been talking about it. Maybe we'll do this with with them. Uh, if there's a way to do some crossover Patreon stuff, but I wanted to watch the Above Majestic documentary. You guys know Above Majestic.
>> Dog [ __ ] >> Yeah, >> it is one of the most entertaining. I mean, if you suspend all your critical thinking faculties and you just enjoy it for what it is, it's a really fantastic documentary. I was hoping maybe we can get together and watch that. Um, >> look, before we even get into it, you know, all of this have what what where do we go now? Kind of a, you know, because it's it's this big hole and and people are a little lost.
>> Some people might not even know what happened to him. Um, and and to be perfectly honest, I'm a little bit >> I'm personally a fan of all the conspiracy theories flying around. He's still alive.
So many within. So I guess for those unfamiliar, David uh kind of crazy actually because he called the police before he did it. He grabbed his gun, went outside, called the cops, said, "Hey, I'm about to shoot myself."
>> Waited waited for the cops to show up.
Waited for a cop to get up to him and demand he drop the weapon and then boom, he took >> You know what that is? That's typical David fashion. He needs an audrated showman.
>> Yes. Look, he to the very end to the very end, he probably asked for a dono.
>> Yes.
>> And didn't get one. You know, >> his last words were, "Smack that like button."
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Like and subscribe.
>> Oh, no.
>> So [ __ ] up, man.
>> Yeah. But then within >> It's terrible. It's really horrific.
It's brutal.
>> Within maybe 30 minutes of him being dead, I saw the wonderful Carrie Cassidy of Project Camelot, who might be just the dumbest [ __ ] ever.
>> [ __ ] stupid. She tweets out, "Good news, everyone. I've had a psychic vision. David isn't dead. He faked his death to go join the alliance and work with the secret space program."
>> I love that.
>> She's now also saying the government killed him. So, I don't know how those two things are compatible. Well, I when they started calling him a scientist is when I was like, you got I honest I that was I just started watching videos of uh people open packs of Pokemon cards cuz I couldn't.
>> I just a scientist in the same way that like Yakub is a scientist.
>> Yes. And that it's not real. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
>> But they started calling him a scientist and was like, I can't even deal with these people, dude. It was a fitting tribute in a way because there's nothing David would have liked more than being tied to like all the conspiracy and scientists, but he >> never produced anything scientific. He he produced I mean kind of gody YouTube videos. He he was like a [ __ ] showman.
Yeah, it wasn't >> very doing science.
>> I didn't absorb a ton of his content outside of like the, you know, sort of the fringe conspiracy thing that I'd watch and he would be a part of it. like I said, the the Above Majestic documentary. Um, and he seemed like a great source of information if you were looking for a guy that could flow like newagnostic [ __ ] His his ability to to go on tangents and just recite >> all of those things, you know, all of the things having to do with that that idea, >> that woman that you mentioned who, you know, had it on good authority that he was still alive and had joy. It's one of those things like I don't know if you're familiar with the fittest flat earther, but he it's like nobody ever dies.
Nobody in the conspiracy world ever dies. They just go on to be somebody else. They go on. They do live under our hearts. Um but she goes on to say in that tweet >> that this has been verified by other psychics. So other I had this psychic premonition that he wasn't dead. Checked in with a bunch of other psychics. Can confirm definitely not dead.
>> It goes beyond that because just a little while ago she tweeted out it's been reconfirmed by some lady with doussing rods.
>> Yeah. It's just this [ __ ] stupid [ __ ] on Instagram live holding sticks going like, "Hey, is David dead?" And the sticks point towards no. And she's like, "See, I told everyone."
>> But we're the we're the distasteful ones cuz we called him gay a couple times, >> a couple thousand times and all of a sudden we're the bad guys.
>> Hell in the world he's still alive. He's just faking it for clicks, I guess.
>> Hold on. Let's play a little bit of a thought experiment. What if you guys are [ __ ] [ __ ] and totally wrong and he is alive?
>> Boy, would that be great news, >> dude? That would save us one show a week. I would love that. Are you kidding? Our biggest for source of content's gone. I would very happy.
>> We wouldn't have to deal with the Boulder Police Department. We'd be out of a lot of [ __ ] trouble if that were the case.
>> I wonder if Ian Carol could come out of hiding if he was still alive.
>> Is he in hiding? You know what's funny?
Ian Carol went into hiding and nobody [ __ ] cares.
>> So many great wrinkles of this David Wilcock thing, but that is probably my my personal favorite.
>> I heard he killed him. I heard Ian Carol killed David.
>> Was he dousing?
>> Is he hiding in the closet again? Wait, why why is Ian Carol wrapped up into this?
>> He's nervous. I think he thinks he's a scientist as well.
>> Oh, so he might be taken out.
>> Well, yeah, because the narrative is now that Yeah, he's he was one of the 12 scientists that's died in the last 15 years. Uh, >> of course. Of course. So much fun.
>> Look, a lot of credit to David if he planned this for a while because he did very uh purposefully repeatedly say, "I'm so happy to be alive." Yes.
>> And talk about how bad it would be uh to kill yourself. We can get in. He did. A lot of people who have been saying he didn't kill himself. They're pointing to a tweet from 2022 where he said he's not suicidal. But >> it's important in four years.
>> Oh, between then and now, he lost everything. He lost his wife, his dog, his money, his job. He was about to lose his house, maybe his freedom.
>> In his mind, he lost like a trillion dollars.
>> Yes. Multiple trillion dollars.
>> People have no idea the generational wealth he lost in his mind.
>> He was going to use it to kill us. He said so he was going to he was going to sue us into oblivion when he became a trillion.
>> You don't think that this could be like a Machavelian plot to you guys?
>> Wait, you guys specifically?
>> Uh his critics of us Steven Cambium and there's others.
>> Well, you you guys are pretty uh critical of him.
>> We we have maybe made some critiques about David over the years. We've certainly criticized what he promotes.
>> It turns out more powerful than we knew.
>> Yes. Perhaps perhaps we're we're very powerful wizards in a way.
>> I feel like someone who just discovered they have superpowers, but I accidentally took out a village to do it.
>> You know, pretty much everyone we cover dies like at this point.
>> Yeah. Yeah. We used to joke. We used to call ourselves prophets of doom jokingly because we were only like right about things, but apparently that's not really a good bit anymore. I think over 50% of the people we have covered with any sort of regularity have died.
>> Young Gary Spivey's on the way out for sure.
>> Yeah, he's looking awful.
>> So, you guys have done a number on on Steven Greer as as well, right? And um >> Yeah, but if he didn't get AIDS, he's probably going to live for a while.
>> Yeah, he's more lizard than that.
>> You think so? Cuz he doesn't look so great. He looks pretty >> The steroids will keep him going for a while.
>> Yeah. Until it fries his liver. I'm sure he's sitting on a warm rock somewhere.
Look, we'll honor him as a scientist, too.
>> Yes. I'm sure he'll be Well, it's funny because like he does the same thing David would do where Steven Greer is like, "I briefed the president and then it turns out what he meant is he sent a letter to the White House like a [ __ ] school child." Yeah.
>> Whereas these guys just they >> like a school child.
>> I mean that I remember doing that in like third grade and Stephen Greer is [ __ ] 60. Like I briefed the president in [ __ ] crayon. He's a a very stupid man. Uh I I think he might be above our powers. He He has >> above majestic. You know this um there's this map going around. What's the What's the map? It's like the attractive.
>> No, which David was not.
>> David David was not a pedophile.
>> David was a lot of things, but he was not that.
>> He never [ __ ] children.
>> I will actually fight people if anyone goes to that. He was a >> and good man.
>> He was an honorable celibate closeted gay man. Well, this is the thing that people don't understand about you guys is is, you know, having critiques of an individual, very obvious and and accurate critiques about an individual.
That's not the same thing as hating them. That's not what you guys did.
>> No, we dislike the ideas, not the man.
We're actually rooting for David to kind of [ __ ] turn this around. I like there was nothing better than the David who's on top of the world because he gives us all kinds of cool [ __ ] like above Majestic or his books before he went fully crazy. He had a lot of interesting things to say, but he's been so [ __ ] depressed lately that it just it it ruined his output.
>> This is the the Great Awakening map. I'm sure you guys have seen this floating around. And David Wilcock's name, I believe it's actually towards the top and and almost directly in the center.
>> What's he tied to? This looks like a real sane map. Yeah, this isn't >> man. Where the heck is it? Um, >> this is doing great.
>> Space secret. Where where the hell? We were talking about this on the last episode.
>> This might not be the right one, but yeah, >> there's a couple of different Great Awakening. Uh, >> I think I know what you're talking about, >> but his name is like smack dab in the middle of it. He is of some importance.
Back in the day when Q was That's kind of thing that [ __ ] ruined him to be honest. But he said he was talking to Q at a certain point. He said Q was a female. I'm sure he [ __ ] dude. I'm sure that somebody was talking to him.
>> Yes. Yes. In his mind, as we always said, David was not a liar. He was gullible.
>> No, it's very important to point that out. David never lied about anything, he was just the world's most gullible boy.
He was just he had the mind of like a four-year-old. And no matter what anyone told him, like, "Hey, I went to the moon and I fought the space Nazis." Yeah. He just like, "Oh my god, that's great. We got to get this out to the public.
>> I mean, I I find the guy uh very likable, but he's said a number of things that are completely outlandish.
Uh who who told him turned him into a a peanut butter sandwich or or a banana sandwich?
>> The reptilians did it.
>> When you start finding out that people made you into a banana sandwich, >> Yeah.
>> and you start remembering those things, >> right, >> you got to take some time off.
>> So that was You got to take some time off. Sound like a [ __ ] muppet. the reptilians. He's crying.
>> The reptilians or No, I think that was the Illuminati. They kidnapped him from his house when he was a child and they took him to his high school like stage area and then they all sodomized him and turned him into a banana sandwich.
>> How did he get back from the banana uh sandwich?
>> Uh some again some sort of wizard must have.
>> I believe they uh they memory wipe and just put you back in your body and it's like it you'll never believe this never happened.
>> Banana sandwich.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> That's a hell of a >> What kind of bread?
>> I don't know. I mean, white bread. White bread. Wonderbread kind of fluffer.
>> It was a public school. It's Wonderbread.
>> Yeah. They didn't have whole grain money at the school.
>> You know what's amazing? I don't know if you guys feel this way. When I hear that story, that does nothing to actually make me dislike him. In fact, I like him exponentially more.
>> That is what we wanted from David. That is what we were trying to get him back to is just embrace the [ __ ] inner insanity and give us secret space stories. I miss when he was talking about, you know, the dinosaurs kept in the Nazi base on the moon or when he went to Amua Mua to fight someone. He had all kinds of >> uh Cory good and we'll have to get into Cory Good because he's a real [ __ ] piece of [ __ ] But um yes, he he had all these stories and I think his his trust had been so badly betrayed by Cory Good and a few other people, Chris Bascar of Statat, that uh it just collapsed his belief in himself. Dude, I wanted to do uh Tik Toks with Will [ __ ] and it was uh just David watching like the top 10 Tik Toks of the week and having to commentate on them.
>> Oh man, that would have been the best.
>> It would have been sick, dude. Just David in his [ __ ] his gay little suits, >> his sisle jackets.
>> His sizzle jackets as he called them.
Yeah.
>> Did you ever offer him uh rather than absolutely brutal yet accurate critique, did you ever offer maybe like um >> help?
>> Employment help? Yeah. you know, not employment of David Wilco, but but you know, hey, I can help uh produce some of your stuff.
>> I literally offered to produce his show.
I was like, "Dude, call me." Cuz when we we could tell he was running out of content. Yeah.
>> I was like, "Dude, just call me. I can easily do this every week." I was like, "I'll do it for free."
>> I think towards the end of this, like the last couple months, it's been more us trying to give him advice than it has really been making fun of him because he just became so like so sad. Yeah, it was such a bummer. Which is the other part that was crazy to see everyone be like, "No, he was totally happy. No one saw this coming." Like, we watched him every week. It was so apparent that it was actually concerning.
>> Look, in terms of his mental health, it was maybe a year and a half ago where he said his parents took him to Disneyland when he was a kid to sex traffic him to Gilane Maxwell and he got raped by like the entire Disney Imagineer team. Yeah.
He was way far gone. For anyone saying his mental health, it didn't lead to his He was literally an insane person.
>> What was his uh what was his status with ancient aliens like up until >> I commentator for them, right?
>> I think that ended in uh 2012.
>> There's two stories of this uh 20 little later 2014.
>> Once again, David has been really wrong a couple times over the last like 12 years. That's the That's the other thing is he's had some really big swings and misses >> and the QAnon one broke him. But with Ancient Aliens, his story was that he left the show because they had John Podesta on and he said, you know, that was like dishonorable.
>> Yeah.
>> Oh, that's kind of a gangster move if you go sorry. Uh yeah, I'm sure it's a it's you know, it's a lot of money the contract for Ancient Aliens.
>> He's not a fan of those paintings.
>> It's really the paintings. It's not the things that he did or didn't do. It's just his art choices. But the other part of that story is David kept wanting more money. And that's that's the other thing.
>> I think he was just a diva to be honest.
>> David, look, when when he he had a couple beliefs, one of his shest beliefs, and it's prevalent throughout the entirety of his writings, is he said he was going to be the most famous man ever. He he had visions of living in a house in Malibu where he'd have to have like a moat in a gate, like a [ __ ] castle.
>> Damn, dude. Wanted a moat. He said he was going to be far more famous than the Beatles or Michael Jackson. He was going to exceed that level by like a long shot. And he really he acted as if he believed that for a long period of time.
Constantly demanding more money or private security or >> Well, that's why I wanted some of those clips to go at least a little viral because that's way more fun than him at the end. Him at the end was not fun.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Him him when he was crushing and thought he was about to be one of the richest men on the planet. That was really fun.
That was pure David.
>> That was just I mean it's just a crazy guy who thinks he's going to be a trillionaire. Think of the things you can do.
>> I mean he sounds cool as [ __ ] you know, during those moments at least. Uh I I don't Right now what I see is a lot of you know and I like we said earlier he's probably pumped to find out that he's the center of a bunch of conspiracy theories, but overwhelmingly it's uh he's not dead. He faked his own death.
Um >> let me tell you something. I'm really happy that we backed off Alberino.
>> Oh yeah. the Z could have gone.
>> That was going to be my analogy is like, can you guys imagine if Timothy Alberino after your debate with the with you guys just went and [ __ ] uh blew his head off?
>> Dude, before we debated him, I had proposed or prophesied. I was like, >> I think we could make this guy into our David Wilcock.
>> Oh, but we don't want that.
>> It was becoming that.
>> It was. It was. Yeah. Not now. Now, now that we know how it ends, I guess it's not so much fun anymore.
>> No, it kind of sucks.
>> A lot less disgenic, though. Not that David Wilco was was inherently disgenic.
It was just like there were times where I would see his forehead and I would forget >> like whoa is a monstrosity.
>> That was his best case for being an alien, which he did. Uh he he started he came out of the cosmic closet a few years ago where he said he was part alien in one of his uh lectures he gave and then he just never mentioned it again. which is another great David move where he'll say something absolutely insane like he was part of the my lab program and then he'll just never talk about it again.
>> Well, was there anything that he said that you were like oh that might be I mean besides like being molested you know like whatever there was a pajamas thing. I know there was a pajama thing pajamas. Yeah I think the rape pajamas >> David was a really good aggregator of like past uh UFO researchers and he was good at synthesizing things.
>> He he was a good like UFO historian.
Yes, >> he knew a lot of the deep lore about the people from the 50s and [ __ ] >> Once he started listening to the voices in his head, it got a little dodgy. You know, >> it's hard to judge a ton of his work because Cory Good tainted so much.
>> Cory Good is such a monumental piece of [ __ ] He he uh is just a god awful person. He's trying to grift off of David's death. He's trying to work up sort of a mass against us.
>> Yeah. Cory is the one uh trying to get his followers to report us to the Boulder Police for cyberstalking, which >> they should. Yeah. So, is cyberstalking a public YouTube show?
>> I don't know if you can do that.
>> No, by just watching public YouTube videos. Yeah, that's not cyberstalking.
But these people, I mean, they're insane. Cory Good has manus evil in his heart and he's trying.
>> His life is about to be ruined. He's being held in contempt of court and he's also his bankruptcy was denied by the court. So he's going to owe a bunch of people a lot of money soon. So he's trying to kind of capitalize off this because David was his last attachment to any sort of mainstream UFO movement. So >> someone with talent.
>> Yes. So he's trying to turn this into something to to >> I got to say though, you know, to do it right at the the the what what appears to be the finish line. You know, this guy Trump is talking about disclosure, >> right? That's the part that really made >> it's like, yo, dude, you were about to be >> it gives me pause.
>> Be a lie, but you were going to be vindicated, dude. Because what a great time to do it though and the conspiracy theories that will be.
>> What a great time to fake your own death.
>> Well, look here. Doing it on 420 is incredibly funny. And I I really love that he picked an iconic date to do it.
>> This kind of further complicates it. Two things complicate this, which is that David had been sober for some period of time. And then about two weeks ago, the last episode we did about him, he was very clearly [ __ ] stoned on the back half of it because he was happy again.
It was the first time he'd been [ __ ] happy.
>> So sad, dude.
>> I don't think that >> I mean, again, my thumbnail is him going from sad to happy throughout the episode.
>> You can literally see it in the thumbnail.
>> It is. It's incredibly ironic at the end. But the other thing is again about two weeks ago, maybe the weed is tied into this, he started channeling again.
So he started hearing the voices. So the combination of uh hearing voices and then getting incredibly stoned. I think that that might have played a role in that.
>> Did he say who who he was whom of the Galactic Federation he was channeling?
>> Well, it had been Michael the Archangel.
Right. Right.
>> Which again, if what if your loved one tells you they're talking to an Archangel, >> get them help. We gota we got to sit down and talk to people folks because like maybe they're not actively hurting someone but that is a really crazy [ __ ] thing to be doing and we might need to have a little heavier of a hand dealing.
>> Most recently he had decided he wasn't going to apply a name to the entity. So I'm sure you know some people will say it was a demonic or something but uh he the other kind of complicating thing >> he said he wasn't willing to name the entity. He'd been burned too many times like before before he said it was raw and they changed it to Archangel Michael and then we start pointing out how it couldn't have been Archangel Michael. I think he just he got gunshy is not a good phrase to use.
>> Yeah, gunshy is a bad one in hindsight but yeah, but not gunshy but the general sentiment of gunshy.
>> Yes, what those words mean sort of not literally anymore. Do you think that uh because when I hear that I go, "Yeah, he probably was like something was whispering [ __ ] in his ear." But there is to me the comedy is not lost on me where these things are just like telling Archangel Michael like they're just making [ __ ] up and then give them some time and they go, "Actually, it's raw.
It's raw, dude. Trust me, this time it's definitely raw."
>> He definitely could have been being [ __ ] with. Um he also So here's another weird thing and I haven't really seen this reported much. He wrote his note two days before he did it. So something had obviously caused him Yeah.
cuz he sent it to his lawyer. When he sent it to his lawyer, I think he knew if he sent his lawyer know to try and do something. So he phrased it all [ __ ] weird. He said like if an accident were to happen to me, I'm sorry, but he had planned it out. And I'm guessing we're going to find out there was some piece of information regarding >> the IRS taking his house or seizing his bank account or something.
>> There were there were a handful of things that were imminently about to go very wrong.
>> He we had been trying to tell him uh you know you can't just ignore this and it'll go away. And he just kept ignoring it. And and they the IRS he owed him $2 million. He invested $2 million in Stavati. Uh, which is a fraudulent company.
>> Chris Besar. Chris Bescar, who is the CEO of Stavati, is >> this piece of [ __ ] >> He needs to go to [ __ ] prison.
>> What'sat?
>> Stavati was the aerospace company that was supposed to be uh developing hovercraft and zero point energy.
>> Hell yeah.
>> David believed in them very much. Again, so much so he gave him over $2 million.
He believed he was, as he put it, the uh the grandfather of anti-gravity technology.
>> Hell yeah.
>> Now, the problem is Stat has been around 30 years. They've never produced uh a product. And right now, the judge actually just decided that uh one of their former investors who called the company a Ponzi scheme and investment scam, that lawsuit is proceeding to trial.
>> And we read we read through the transcript and it basically sounds like it's various conmen trying to con each other at a fake company.
>> Yeah. And David seems like he was the ultimate rube and they were taking just all of his money.
>> Yeah, that's what it sounds like.
>> It should be noted David gave us three reasons why he did it and foremost among those was poverty. So, you know, $2 million that buys a lot of food and shelter. Yeah, >> that's a strange move. Yeah, you I can see poverty as a major uh driver of >> starvation is what look David his mind wasn't right.
>> He was and he was he was prone to being hysterical. So, I don't know if those were entirely accurate, but I do think the walls were closing.
>> He also became convinced the three things it was poverty, starvation, and disease, which again a little dramatic when you're living in a mansion in Colorado.
>> I wish he'd have made a PowerPoint, >> but uh he for some reason he claimed that would he PowerPointed.
>> Namaste.
>> That's No one ever did a PowerPoint like David Wilcock did. Yeah, he he was great at them.
>> He nailed every PowerPoint.
>> Why didn't he sell his house? He didn't have multiple properties.
>> Okay, he sold one of them that was quick and easy because it was New York >> cuz it was cheap, but his his Colorado one is kind of nice. And I think >> Well, it's more complicated than that.
It's because So, David uh I think he listened to too much sovereign citizenship and he was trying to avoid taxes, which in the long run, all those people get [ __ ] busted. Uh David created this like Wyoming corporation.
It's sort of a legal loophole called like a cowboy cocktail or some [ __ ] like that. So he put his house under that company to avoid paying taxes. But then that company failed to pay taxes. So that company went bankrupt and then before David could sell the house because it wasn't technically in his name anymore, he had to create a new company and then try and transfer it to that. But that is you can't quick claim that [ __ ] the government. Uh, you got to pay taxes. The tax man can never be escaped.
>> Yeah.
>> See, this is what's messed up is it seems glaringly obvious given your thorough coverage over the years that this was um, you know, financial as well as a bunch of other things, feelings of failure, etc. >> Um, >> but I do think they're going to try to spin this in a really big way.
>> Well, they weren't feelings. Sorry.
Well, no, I was just thinking Dave never said that. Oh, more like perceived the perception of failure, you know, really perception of failure.
>> No. Well, you know, um but it feels to me like they're going to they've been doing this thing with NASA scientists or or potential UAP scientists um that have mysteriously gone missing and I think we're up to like number 11 12 if you if you count David.
>> I do. Um but if you look at this narrative under I do and I do uh under any scrutiny you start to go well these [ __ ] people like some of these people died in in 2022 like >> accidents and stuff or like cancer. Yeah it's >> and some of them got missing whatever but they're still weaving them into this narrative. I don't I don't know what exactly they're getting ready to do.
They might be trying to do some, you know, compelling [ __ ] uh, for when they finally do the the damn breaks and they go, "It's time to release the zero point technology, which, you know, uh, huge drop of the ball.
They're going to declassify something.
>> They're going to declassify something."
But, but it feels like they're going to they're going to wrap him up into this.
>> What a sad time to be out of the [ __ ] game, though. I swear, dude, if they go to reveal some [ __ ] if they go to be like, you know, we're gonna have a presentation, White House correspondents, like everything, and all of a sudden, David Wilcox steps from behind the curtain and he's got, you know, [ __ ] what is that? Element 252 or whatever the [ __ ] that Oh, >> he said it was David that actually saved Donald Trump the other night.
>> Yes, it probably was.
>> David intervened and stopped that gay black guy or whatever he was.
>> In honor of David, I do have to say that.
>> Not on my watch.
The Butler The Butler, Pennsylvania incident. Was it when David was like at his most manic? So after Trump, someone shot Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, he went on his stream and he said he used his psychic abilities to bend that bullet out of the way.
>> Hell yeah.
>> And went right into that father. So great job.
>> Whoops.
Look, he tried. He didn't have full control of his psychic abilities.
>> I didn't mean to do that. Yeah, >> it was my first time.
>> Whoopsy doodle, >> but uh yeah, >> went right into that father.
>> Oh my god, man. I look, you know, is there any part of you that if he's all about ascension and he's all about this, you know, higher dimensions and everything, at some point it becomes obvious that you're left with a decision. And it's like if you're obsessed with this ascension, your physical body holds you back. Maybe he thought he could do more.
>> I appreciate you trying to brightside this, but let me make it real [ __ ] depressing. David believed if you took your own life, that was it. There was no ascension. But I think so >> he had a kind of a Christian view on uh >> more David lore. David believes that in a past lifetime he was a fifth density kind of like Jesus figure.
>> Oh, nice. Hell yeah.
>> Well, hold on.
>> Well, it doesn't go a good way.
>> It doesn't go good. He says he betrayed his followers. So that's why he had accumulated so much negative karma. So part of me thinks David >> Yeah, that's exactly it was expanding.
Yes, it it grew kind of like one of those clowns where you shoot the water into the head.
>> He had to work it off.
>> But uh I think part of him may have thought the karma he had accumulated was just inescapable and that would be uh why he did what he did.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. I mean there's probably uh it's interesting because that is my understanding. He talked a lot about the idea of and and how it's not the way and and yet here we are. And that honestly that's another thing that people put into that bucket of like it's not true. It's not real. I just want to address that chat.
Uh we're paying we're paying tribute to David Wilcox.
>> Yeah, please.
>> Jerry, I understand [ __ ] >> Jerry Hurley is is hurt um by the loss of Willock and and we had people in our live stream on Saturday threatening to us, which I thought was pretty funny.
>> You're not going to believe this. We've been getting a lot of [ __ ] over the last week.
>> I don't know. I tell you this. Yeah, I don't tell you this, but we got posted on Reddit. You'll never believe this.
They They didn't like what we did.
No, >> that's interesting because I did watch it.
>> I watched it and I was like, "This is a lot nicer than I thought."
>> Yeah, it's from like two people that actually got this.
>> Actually gave a [ __ ] Actually saw his problems mounting. Actually were giving words of warning and >> um Yeah, sure. They they laughed about it, but I mean, we're we're in, you know, we're in crazy times. If you don't laugh, you're going to you're going to die.
>> Yeah. If you watch the tape, that's what you'll find out. But if you just look at the thumbnails and the titles, you might uh you might come to a different conclusion.
>> People have been drawing different conclusions, which is understandable, I suppose.
>> Dude, I made I made him Jesus on the cross like three weeks ago and [ __ ] >> Unbelievable.
>> He [ __ ] does this. That's great, David. Wow. He really [ __ ] called our bless.
>> I I was really hoping he sure showed us.
I I was really hoping he'd come back on the third day, but no such luck.
>> Yeah, we worked. Well, that's why we were trying we're trying not to say anything because like, well, let's give him time. Let's let him cook.
>> Making this even crazier. We were somehow the ones who broke the news about this. I didn't we didn't mean to do that. So, I think a lot of the attention we got was because of that. I got a I have a friend who kind of ran in the same circles as him and she texted me and I thought she was [ __ ] with me. It turns out no. But, uh, >> yeah.
>> So, turns out no. I tweeted something about David taking his own life and it just got an insane amount of views which did not help our situation.
>> Glass half full.
>> Yes, we did pick up a lot of followers.
>> We went pretty viral. So, >> the bad news they don't like us at all.
>> Well, they really they really hate us.
>> Well, I mean, I got a question. It's like where do you guys go from from here? I mean, after the grieving process, of course. All right. Well, we'll join him shortly. No. Um, >> no, he ruined that for us, too. I can't even He ruined for me.
>> He really did ruin >> cuz I was like, damn, this is a real [ __ ] sad.
>> They're going to call me a scientist.
That's gay as hell. I don't [ __ ] want that.
>> Hold on. Wait here. Let me see you something real quick. Uh, so this is from High Stranges six days ago on Reddit. Uh, the post says, "Willock takes his own life." And then their comment says, "Is this the comment or is this the actual This might be the actual post." Yeah, I think it's the whole post. Uh, no, no, no, it's a comment.
David Wilco has been off my radar for a long time. But after this news, I looked him I looked up who hidden in plain sight are >> and saw a bunch of videos of them making fun of him like ruthlessly >> week after week, month after month. Uh, towards the end, you can see David unraveling a little bit. Um, financial troubles maybe. I don't know. Was David a fraud? Maybe. Kind of looks like it, but it doesn't sit with me the way they went after him like this.
>> Yeah. So, we got we >> Oh, it's your tweet. It's >> Yeah, >> that's your tweet. It says, "I've been informed David Wilco has taken his own life. This is not the ending any of us want." And that's reasonable. I don't know why I was going to laugh at that because it's funny because it is kind of funny.
>> The the absurdity of it all. Now, the good news for us is we have only received maybe six or 7,000 messages along those lines, so I'm sure it'll blow over any >> Yeah, this is actually um egregious.
There's a lot of comments on here, and they don't seem to like you guys.
>> Okay. Okay. Well, let's let's uh let's flush this out.
>> Okay.
>> Um >> he comes back from the dead.
>> No, no, no. We have a time machine.
>> Yeah. I wish >> you get a time machine and you get to uh dictate how David lives the rest of his life. What did you guys want to see?
>> Yeah. What was the advice you were giving him?
>> What does it look like? What would it have looked like if that advice had had come to fruition?
>> I had a perfect pitch for him. I wanted to go to Colorado and have him become our third Mike and join us and just do comedy [ __ ] I wanted him to do characters and talk about whatever [ __ ] was going. I wanted him to talk about Hassan [ __ ] and what Kai Sonat was up to. I wanted David Wilcock to comment on everyday life because speed.
>> Yes. Because that's way they let him do this. That cuz that's way funnier than him spewing some other [ __ ] that he'd done on a PowerPoint seven years ago.
>> I want to see what happens when you apply that kind of a mind to like um the behavior of, you know, inner city black kids.
>> Exactly. I want to show him uh racial statistics for IQ and get his thoughts on why African countries are so low.
>> Story David would have been a great a great story arc for for the rest of us.
>> Just give me David Wilcock as a person and I can come up with three threehour shows every week. That'll be very fun.
>> Realistically, the thing we actually wanted him to do was abandon Stat because he was spending insane amounts of money. He was still making good money. He made several hundred,000 a year from YouTube. And if he had just left Stavati alone, stopped giving them money and cut bay with Cory Good, he could have lived comfortably. But I'm not sure he >> cared uh to live like the rest of us poor.
>> No, David David was a classy [ __ ] >> He was a fancy boy up until it was all or nothing, wasn't it? It was like if you say because you can't just go out there and say, "I'm going to be one of the richest men on the planet." Um, and then have it not come. So So I I almost It's It's a heavy. I almost respect the all or nothing thing. You go, "Oh, I can see the money's not going to pan out the way that I thought."
>> When you guys said that he wanted to be a trillionaire, I thought it mean >> what he settled for billionaire.
>> No, I just thought he was [ __ ] close.
Like not not monetarily, but close spiritually.
>> No. Yeah, but there is that line, right?
He won that line where >> Kanye West where you lose it all and then make it all >> as one or the other. And I was like, he was super close to it. He positioned himself correctly.
>> [ __ ] put it all on red.
>> Stumbled. Yeah. And again, that's what we say. He really believed it because if he didn't believe it, there's no way he would have lost all his money trying to develop hover cars, which for some reason he thought were incredibly important for the future. Hovering was just absolutely necessary.
>> We were going to replace every airplane in existence with hover cars and hover planes that use anti-gravity technology.
David was >> David Wilco was >> Don't [ __ ] say we >> Excuse me. Wouldn't it be funny if they did it after he was gone? I know if Svati [ __ ] pulls this around. But >> yeah, if Chris Bescar was like, "Well, I got something for you." And he actually [ __ ] does it. That'd be something.
>> That's honestly though, I Yo, that's a possibility.
>> [ __ ] maybe, dude.
>> That would be That would be a great ending to this saga. We look like idiots. We look like idiots twice.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. If Stevati pulls this off, uh, that would really be a hell of a rabbit out of a hat-tick.
>> Yeah.
>> Oh, I didn't know he he claimed to be the reincarnation of Edgar Casey. That was so that was one of his big early claim to fame. Uh claims to fame was he claimed to be Edgar Casey, but he abandoned that.
>> Yeah, we have the book.
>> There's a whole [ __ ] book on it.
>> That's the other thing. When people want to criticize us, we've bought the books.
We've read the books. We've watched all the videos. You don't even know about the turkeys.
>> We made the super chats.
>> Yeah. You don't know about Monica the moose. You weren't there when he was building shrines to squirrels.
>> Yeah. When he was communicating telepathically with the wildlife and teaching them how to speak English. was fun.
>> His good books, his dog [ __ ] books, we've read them all.
>> Yes, we've consumed everything he ever did, which is why I think we understood uh how [ __ ] up his mind was towards >> and now he watches over us for better or worse.
>> Yes. Waiting to kill us.
>> What was the deal with the rape pajamas?
>> So, >> yeah.
>> All right. Well, uh >> I feel as though I've asked something distasteful.
>> No, David, >> that's a pretty funny story.
>> David did Project Camelot way back in the day. I got to kind of set it up. So he did this interview with Carrie Cassidy and he pulled out these pajamas.
This like 2007. He goes like, "These are magic pajamas. I had like one of the greatest days of my life. The aliens came to me. We like hung out." And then fast forward to 2023 and he shows the pajamas. He goes, "These are the pajamas I was wearing when I got raped." And then he starts there was a football player on the pajamas. And he starts pointing. He's like, "The helmet looks like a penis. And look at his butt here.
That's predictive programming for me getting sodomized.
>> Geez, what the [ __ ] bro?
>> But he was he but he was fine at the end. There was nothing wrong. Yeah, >> he was cool about it. It wasn't like >> he was he was a scientist.
>> I don't want you to be sad.
>> I'm just telling you about the >> We did We did something very similar like the whole In the Mind of a Mad Man.
They've been in his mind for quite a while, but >> yeah, >> they've been a bad influence on us.
>> Be realistic with me. Yeah. Yes.
Absolutely. Number one. So, thank you Charlie Robinson for that. But >> when you when you saw what happened, were you genuinely surprised, not just that it happened, but at the timing like could you have gameplay that it's I I was surp I never if he were to have done it, I never would have anticipated him using a gun, which all his friends have kind of echoed. That was sort of like him doing it in such a violent way like in front of the police. That was [ __ ] >> Well, to be honest, if you were him, how would Oh, just like >> No, I get why I I I get why he did it because he didn't want them to not find his body for weeks because he was in the middle of nowhere.
>> Yeah. He >> It would have been It would have been weeks before they found his decaying corpse >> and it would have been like a friend or something.
>> Yeah. It would have been his one of his family members stumbling upon to his, you know, mummified remains.
>> So, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, actually kind of smart.
>> It does make sense. But I still I'm >> You guys would have you you would have raised the alarm and checked >> after after two weeks and no tweets. I'd have been like, "Oh god. Oh god. Oh god." That would have been that would have been the only thing more horrific is if we had been the ones to discover the body.
>> Yeah. We were >> not knowing would have been brutal.
>> Yeah. Oh, it have been I would have been my baby's missing. Oh Lord God, my baby's gone.
>> Oh no. Where's my baby?
>> Oh no. It's going to get kind of worse at some point. I'm sure we're going to get the body cam footage and that's going to be [ __ ] horic I didn't think he had a gun. If if I didn't if I had known he'd had a gun, I'd actually probably have been significantly more concerned.
>> Where did he live? Colorado, right?
>> Listen Netherlands, Colorado. But uh >> but if I Yeah. If I'd known he was armed, I would have probably had them intervene.
>> Was he kind of like anti-gun like that?
>> He was a liberal. He was kind of a [ __ ] liberal. Yeah. From like 2008, though.
And then he became queuing on that kind of [ __ ] >> Not like politically. He just like had to say he voted for Obama to be cool to like crystal [ __ ] >> Obama, what the hell are you doing, man?
>> Yeah, >> that was uh >> he was really torn up about that.
>> That was when Obama I think we were also going to get shot.
>> You're going to get shot. You're going to get shot.
>> That was uh the 2020 election as we all remember or 2016.
>> He's a big Obama guy.
>> Yeah. When we went to the polls, we were all shot. It was a terrible day. Yeah, >> man. I actually didn't know that he was uh liberal at all because watching some of the clips, especially the ones that you guys played on the show, um I found him to be like kind of based.
>> He got there.
>> Yeah, he went he went big time Trump the last couple years.
>> Oh, he was a MAGA guy for sure.
>> Yeah, he he thought Trump was going to pull him out of his situation. In fact, he used to he went to one of the Trump hotels and he stole the slippers and he would wear them on his stream to try and like signal Donald Trump. He also thought Donald Trump listened to his therapy sessions, which again, in retrospect, kind of an indication maybe his mind wasn't working so hot.
>> Were his therapy sessions public?
>> I don't know, but his therapist should be arrested.
>> Whoever that therapist is, if your client tells you the [ __ ] president is listening in on your therapy sessions, you should probably, you know, look something.
>> Look at what happened. That therapist didn't uh see anything.
>> Yes. If that therapist talked to David with any regularity and didn't think maybe this guy needs some sort of medication or a [ __ ] padded room for a minute, I think uh >> yeah, it's like two dudes with a podcast drinking margaritas frozen margs >> and uh and they're picking up on this.
You're a paid professional, ma'am. Or sir, I don't know.
>> Yes, it >> Oh, it was a woman.
>> I think it was probably I think it was probably a crystal [ __ ] I'm sure it wasn't a real therapist. It was probably some amethyst therapist. Okay, I'm going to play 98 hertz for you and this is going to really cleanse your chakras.
>> I know you think the president is living inside of your computer, but we're going to use these singing bowls.
>> Oh, yeah. I understand. Uh, >> you guys know you know who Shadow of Ezra is?
>> Yeah, he's got like page a little bit, right?
>> Okay. So, at one point David got really really obsessed with Shadow of Ezra.
every single week he would cover Shadow of Ezra's tweets for like two hours. And eventually that kind of started devolving to the point where David seems to believe at one point that they in a past life were uh lovers.
>> If you've ever heard Shadow of Ezra's voice, uh it's a twink. It's a flamboyant gay Mexican twink. Uh, and David was lovers with them in a past life.
>> And we had multiple people reach out to Ezra multiple times be like, "Hey, are you talking to David Wilcock? He keeps saying you're sending him messages on his live streams and repeatedly repeatedly Shadow of Ezra would be like, "No, I don't know who that is." And then one time they looked into it, they're like, "Uh, he seems pretty crazy. I have nothing to do with him."
>> Yeah, they called him crazy. That is actually what got us blocked by David on Twitter because I asked him for comment on Shadow of Ezra saying, you know, David's a [ __ ] insane person. He's making all this up and they blocked us and they ain't >> You know what's crazy though? So after all that, he finally does. Shadow of Ezra has one post on David Wilcox and it's just about the >> of course. Well, >> what do they say? What do they David Wilcock's best friend breaks her silence over his saying she was in touch with him this week. He was in good spirits, excited about the future. Will got clearly not watching his live streams or following his finances.
>> I can't believe that's what people are taking away from that clip.
>> It is so I I've nothing has been more blacking to me than what I've seen people report on the last crazy because like they're just saying things that are so patently false. There's no way you could have been interacting with David in any regular basis and not know about the various lawsuits or the the tax trouble or them repossessing his house potentially.
>> Yeah. Here, let's bring this on real quick because we we had So, you have that tweet. It's it's but that's all the way back December 2022.
>> Um it says, "I'm not suicidal at all.
Just concerned about what happens when you prove God is real." Um which, you know, if you listen to him, he's like praying to the source, the almighty source.
when he prays to God, >> uh, he says, uh, like >> calls her her.
>> He calls him >> father, mother. Father, >> father, mother. There we go. Not him, her. My mistake. Father, mother.
>> Use pronouns with God. No.
>> Well, that'd be woke.
>> By the way, I mean, >> is that sperm on his chin? What is that?
>> I think they're wearing masks. They're wearing >> all that white meth white stuff on my face.
>> [ __ ] Where? You need to stop this [ __ ] >> Sorry. Hold on. Hold on.
>> Black guys from Harlem.
>> I've never been a racist. I can't find it. I don't know.
>> Oh my god.
>> Show me the proof, dumbass.
>> There's this turkey call. We're have There was a [ __ ] >> There was a clip. We need to stop the [ __ ] There was a clip where he said, "I just want to make sure there's all this white mess on my face."
>> Well, there it is. Uh I think those are just like, you know, like a skin mask.
Not a skin mask.
>> I think what you're right, he needed a co-host. Oh, yeah. He needed somebody to reel the [ __ ] in a little bit. He looks terrible in this image to the left. He looks reptilian.
>> He was like visibly losing weight.
>> He was visibly depressed and losing weight here.
>> But in that video, that's the video where he says, you know, every day is a blessing or something. If they cut out I don't know if they cut out the next 5 seconds, but right after he says that he he literally says, I've had like a horrible week >> here. Let's play it. Let's see what happens here.
>> Yeah. Every day that I have on Earth is a gift and a blessing. And I'm very grateful for that because frankly, people are disappearing. Scientists are going missing now. They're saying they're going to investigate this. The president himself is saying they're going to look into this and see if anything's going on. It's a little bit scary. I got to say >> that's interesting. Interesting the way they frame that.
>> Yeah, they caught it.
>> Yeah.
>> Cuz he goes on to say, "What you're saying is uh things have not been so great." He sounds like [ __ ] >> If I didn't know better, >> who is this? Who talks like this? the [ __ ] rabbit hole, right?
>> The [ __ ] frog, dog.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> No, honestly though, when you frame it like that, hell yeah.
>> It would have been something that we covered on the show and be like, "Fascinating scientist David Wil."
Because I do think that the way they're framing this is [ __ ] You don't just go back, you know, all the way to 2022.
>> They're about to do something. They're about to do something.
>> It feels like And they're gonna do it on on the corpse of David Wilcox. That's what they're Will [ __ ] >> I think it Willcock. Yeah. Thank you. Uh >> there's always a plural thing with me. I just I think a lot of people have just really really rotted their brain and I think we're just uh we're really [ __ ] >> There's a certain type of uh person and David definitely spoke to those people where it's just everything is not real.
No matter what happens, if it's a mass shooting, if it's a fire, if a building collapses, it's just those people aren't real. That never happened. Buildings don't even exist. It is just a a complete reputation of reality. There's a >> I love that because you go further and further. So, so you know, let's say we'll take like 911 for example, just to to show this kind of person, right? It's like you go 911 wasn't it was like an inside job and >> there's still a guy in the comments every so often that because I know somebody that died in 911. They're like [ __ ] prove it. Top lobster shows some documentation.
>> If he wasn't dead, I probably could.
Yeah, I would have loved to have introduced you.
>> But it goes it goes to these extremes where it's like you go it was an inside job and like that's a good enough place to have a conversation. You go, well, what do you mean by that? who took out insurance claims on buildings before they fell, you know, fun stuff. But then they go to this place where it's like, >> you know, a plane never hit [ __ ] And uh, you know, what happened was the molecular uh, you know, fundamental molecular structure of the buildings was compromised by a electromagnetic storm that was off the coast >> and all this other [ __ ] And it's like, you know, so it's just like nothing is ever >> just a plane.
>> A plane was pretty plane would be pretty good. Yeah. Yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah, it did some damage. But I there's also people where even if you show them because there's no shortage of evidence. We have the dispatch audio. We have a letter he wrote. His family's confirmed it. His friend confirmed it.
The police confirmed it. I've seen the police report. Like there's no shortage of evidence. And I saw someone look at all that [ __ ] and they just said, "This doesn't feel right. So I'm not >> he's like I choose I choose not to believe this."
He's actually a woman >> that we did we did get David transinvestigated. He was >> well here. Bring this up on stage because I do have some compelling evidence. There is a woman I don't know if you if you guys are aware of her. Um her name is Darlene uh won't vagina.
>> Well, as David would say, yucky.
>> Yeah.
>> By the way, I can't tell you how bummed out I was when I posted that and and and six people thought it was a >> not in the right uh >> won't vagina. You're not in the right ecosystem for if they would they would have posted it like v.
>> Oh, they would have crushed it with their fan base.
>> Well, someone would have showed up at our door and tried to [ __ ] close.
>> One person called me a demon.
>> Oh, yeah. Well, that's only one. Yeah, we did have some people threatening to kill us and we just started bcking at them like chicken.
>> Yeah. Yeah. We're we're trying to encourage someone to murder us. Get us out of this.
>> I think that'd be really funny.
Honestly, it would be great uh for us if you guys got murdered because we'd be sad, but we would make great content out of it.
>> Put us on a t-shirt. Please put us on a t-shirt airbrush like a like you're a black person that died.
>> Yes. Like I'm George Floyd. I want you to put up murals all around that get defaced by inner city.
>> They're with David Wilco now.
>> Yes. That they use for gang markings.
>> We were good boys and we didn't do anything wrong.
>> Yeah. My baby. My baby, Mr. Top. My baby was a good boy.
>> I like that shirt. That's a bad shirt.
Uh missing my tooth there. Um yeah, man.
Well, you know, that's the thing about all these people that are in this community of sort of UAP whistleblowers.
>> I think they are getting fed.
>> So, just by nature of being in Conspiracyville, there's so much fake [ __ ] >> Yeah, >> there's so much fake [ __ ] But there is like this effort to kind of insert real things and you can put real in air quotes because it might not actually be a tangible thing. It might just be somebody controlling a narrative, but somebody's trying to control a narrative. And these guys get their opportunity every once in a while to be kind of the spokesman of it, you know?
Uh, uh, Alzando is the guy right now.
And he's got a bunch of weird [ __ ] happen. He just fell off his motorcycle, got half his face all scabbed up and stuff. Like, it's just these guys >> sell 20 tickets.
>> Can't sell 20 tickets to a [ __ ] event. Even though he's associated with the documentary Age of Disclosure, I think broke streaming records. We sold more tickets than him and nobody even knows who we are, >> right?
>> That's kind of insane. That's kind of insane.
>> They're all propped up. I mean, these these First of all, he has no like substance. So, >> no, he's Mexican.
>> These these people, >> he's just got beans and rice.
>> He's filled with them. It's very I don't know how he even thinks. It's very hard to think with a brain of beans.
>> Kept offering me >> with a brain full of beans.
>> Yes. But, uh, these He's at the end of his timeline. And I don't mean that like dev, but I mean he he has you heard it here first, guys. Hey, when you say it, >> there's a thing that happens when you guys say it.
>> I don't know. So, you heard it here first, guys. If [ __ ] anything happens to Alzando, it wasn't us that says it was it was these two guys that said >> they're like clairvoyants. They predicting this is the problem. This is the problem.
>> Only Only bad things though. Never like good things for anyone. Only right about things.
>> I never thought that was true. But, you know, the more we go through this, I think the more >> the more people that die after we >> Well, this one really hit home. You know, the others were black. So, >> that's not really that's was a statistical probability.
>> Yeah. It was going to be their health.
It was diabetes or that something was >> they they literally did all die of like diabetes and hypertension.
>> Well, one cuz he didn't believe COVID was real, which was pretty cool.
>> Yeah. And then he tried to build a bunker in his backyard and coned him. He was raising ducks in his backyard for the apocalyps.
>> He dropped dead. And what happened to him? He just psychotronic weapons that the government did it. He was scientist.
>> The beeru got to him.
>> Honestly, that's the thing is we know that they they can uh do voice to skull technology. How do we know that there there's a lot of skull there when it comes to Willock? They were probably having a heyday all kinds of [ __ ] in his ear. And by the way, >> that is the funniest thing. Not funny.
It's very dark, but it is like if I was a piece of [ __ ] intelligence operative, >> I would 100% >> be like, "This is the voice of RAW, David, and you are chosen." If I was Brandon like Voice of Skull Technology, you would have done the same thing.
>> 100%.
>> Oh, yeah. I I couldn't be trusted with that type of power.
>> I like to think that they would be like, "Maybe that's not a wise financial decision, David.
>> Maybe don't write that check. Maybe stop giving Chris Bascar all your money.
Think about our show.
>> Arrested for SEC violations.
>> Think about us, David. This would really be bad for us.
>> You're going to make us look like murderers.
>> Don't be selfless, David. We're going to get called murderers on Reddit by [ __ ] >> Yeah, a lot of them.
>> That's all right. The good news is that that doesn't last forever. Uh they they they threaten your life, but then they immediately get bored or whatever they have.
>> Yeah. They forget. They forget pretty rapidly.
>> I mean, to be honest, I'd have been more concerned if Reddit liked us.
>> Yeah. We're not for >> Reddit. I'd have been like, "Oh no, are we gay?"
>> We're for antisocial people who find us through 4chan or something.
>> Well, that's the difference, right?
Which way men, >> it's like 4chan or Reddit.
>> Yeah.
>> You're going to be SCOP, but like are you a >> Yeah. Are you gay about it?
>> Yeah. Are you going to watch [ __ ] porn or someone get beheaded? You get to pick.
>> Yeah.
>> You know, we just found out um we were talking to somebody on our last show.
There's something called hip transitions.
Is Toad transitioning? Are you going to break this to me? Is it Toadette now?
>> Well, so what we've heard is that there was something called um hypnosis or [ __ ] hypno sis. Yeah. Yeah.
>> Yeah. [ __ ] hypnosis.
>> Like you don't [ __ ] know that heard to it myself.
>> I was I was scrolling Reddit and I came across this crazy thing. You'll never realize it until my jack off session.
So, um, apparently they use binaural beats to, uh, kind of, I guess, like, yeah, hypnotize people into into becoming trans, which is >> I just, once again, I think about all the jobs you can give me if I worked in the intelligence agency. like if I had no morals >> and it was like you could whisper sweet nothings into the skull of David Wilcock or you can uh run the website where we're actively transing people that are jerking off. Like >> I don't know if it's like it's not necessarily having no morals. It's like looking at people like what did you used to do with the bugs? The ants you would like make like hold them together.
>> Yeah. Make them fight each other to the death. Yeah.
>> I used to do that, dude.
>> Hell yeah, dude. That's what's up. That [ __ ] was great. the big carpenter ants.
You'd make them bite each other's heads off.
>> I used to get uh black bees and uh I sometimes praying mantises usually.
Sometimes I'd get hornets and I'd put them in little domes and I make them fight like Pokemon.
>> Hell yeah.
>> This is like what the Jews did with black people.
>> Exactly.
>> Except it's we're we're also in there.
They throw us in there.
>> Yeah. We're in the >> Well, and then I built them little ghettos that the winner could live in.
>> Look, you win, you get something. And they go, "Can we have houses on the other side of the dome?" He go, "No, no.
>> Here's a disheveled house in Colorado.
>> Let's not get over ourselves."
>> Yeah. It didn't It didn't help that he kind of ruined the house. He He Well, David, >> how cheap is it going for though?
>> That's true.
>> Does anybody want to flip a house real quick?
>> How much is How much are they selling his I thought it was a mansion?
>> It was listed for 2 million. Uh he had to keep >> in Colorado. That's not that bad. I guess >> he originally listed it for 3 million, but the problem is he kept feeding wildlife and [ __ ] and that ended up with him getting like squirrel infestations.
>> That's how that goes. David, did he have a love interest? They spoke English though, so >> he had a very attractive wife who uh left him some years ago, >> but she uh will [ __ ] to be honest that well kind of. How do you feel about cucumbers? Does that count as a body? We have pornography of her.
>> She did. I We should explain.
>> She put out that video. We did not exclusively get that. Let's legally state that.
>> She recorded porn. Get it on the record.
>> Our lawyer needs us to say that. She uh she did a series of porn videos where it was like instructional porn. And one of them was she taught people. That's not her.
>> I don't think she plays rugby.
>> No. No. She's She's much prettier than that.
>> Yeah. Is that a a rugby player?
>> No. No. No. She was a karate expert, but she did this video. She taught women how to peel a cucumber to [ __ ] themselves with it.
>> I'm sorry.
>> Oh, you have to peel it first. What's wrong with the >> You get more of the nutrients.
>> You know what, T? I'm glad I'm glad you asked. Yes. For the purposes of cleansing the yoni, you want to expose the cucumber maxing >> because the vitamins are in it. Don't don't you don't uh take off the the cucumber part where you hold it. You need a handle.
>> You want the grip.
>> It just seems like with one strong kele, you could sever that thing and lose it up in you.
>> Yeah, that's how like chop it for a salad.
>> Oh, so she's crazy, too. So, >> yeah, she was probably >> Oh, because I think he started Well, I mean, cuz he started bitching at her on live streams. Honestly, this was kind of the first >> Oh, that's embarrassing. Yeah, you never You never [ __ ] at your wife on live stream. That was like the first thing we nailed about him is we saw him interact with his wife and we're like these people [ __ ] hate each other and then sure enough they got divorced.
>> And how long before you noticing cuz I swear to God it's just you guys that are making this as as he would say manifesting it. Um how long before you guys ruined his marriage after noticing maybe a few months a couple months of co >> we used to because we used to have so much time we'd watch his entire streams which were like five and a half to six hours.
>> Yeah. You'll never believe this. We were a big time losers.
>> We had We had no jobs.
>> We had nothing to do. It was co We were like, "Well, let's the day."
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. That honestly that sounds like a lot of fun.
>> It does. It was a good time.
>> I was I was still drinking and doing pills just every day watching David getting high.
>> We wereing we were blacked out by noon.
>> Yeah, it was a great time.
>> Yeah, it ruled. But what we started noticing is his wife used to run the cameras and anytime there was a minor error, not even a big one, like he'd act she'd accidentally go to the wrong camera, he would freak out and he'd stop his presentation. He'd start yelling at her.
>> Yeah. He would get very upset >> and he kept doing it and it kept kind of escalating and we're like, "Dude, what the [ __ ] is going on?"
>> There was also one where he kind of yelled at her a little bit. He thought his microphone was off. He does these meditations.
>> Hold on one second. Mason, get the [ __ ] out. Get out of here, Mason. Get out.
Go.
talking to a dog or a producer.
>> Yes.
>> Wait, is she single? What's up, girl?
>> Do you want to say hi to them?
>> Is she hot? What's up? Oh, wait. Not if she ugly.
>> Well, >> I don't know which which camera she >> right there. Camera for Mason.
>> How many cameras do you guys have?
>> Seven.
>> No, you don't. How many?
>> No, no, no. Okay, you got to go.
>> Thank you. Please. Now it's time to go, Mason.
>> How many heads of livestock?
>> Thank you. Goodbye.
>> I could get you like five cattle.
>> Yeah, with that. Wait, you got a cattle hookup?
>> Yeah, >> I could for the right, you know, the right deal.
>> Lady.
>> Yeah.
>> What? Zman called her coffee mommy.
>> That's not good. Um, man, where the [ __ ] were we? She that she distracts and derails and David yelling at his wife.
There was one >> you guys ruining his marriage, right?
Us doing something wrong again.
>> Very funny in hindsight. Yeah. He he thought uh the microphone was off and he needed someone to time so he just goes up to her and goes say some [ __ ] >> And again, you got to remember this is David at his most professional and put together. His cameras also always looked like [ __ ] which was really funny. They were incredibly poorly color balanced.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh but his at his most professional and he would just break character and start like yelling at her and it's like >> what is what's happening here? But then he >> Well, did she ever was she ever the contributor to like would you do you ever hear anything and you go, "Ah, she's kind of being a bitch."
>> Well, she did [ __ ] the cameras up. Yeah.
I mean, he wasn't wrong. Yeah, she did.
>> She [ __ ] up.
>> She did. She did [ __ ] the cameras up.
>> She wasn't wrong.
>> Yeah, he wasn't wrong. It was more how he freaked out about it that was the problem.
>> I think they kind of had a bit of tension over this Corey Good fella. He uh Beth [ __ ] hated Cory Good and that was like David's partner in crime.
>> So, she had good discernment.
>> Yes. Well, she knew he was gonna [ __ ] David's money up.
>> Yeah, she wanted David, in fact, she wouldn't even say Corey Good's names and like email or anything. That's how much she hated him. But, uh, she wanted David to kind of cut bait with him because he had really [ __ ] up their lives by getting David to leave his guy gig. And I think >> the tension from that kind of spilled over into more marital problems, >> right, >> man. Well, I mean, you know, I guess if you're [ __ ] with his money, then >> Yeah. Well, so the plan was they had uh Cosmic Disclosure at Gaia, which was doing very well. Apparently, they were both getting paid 300 grand a year to do >> What is that? That's their show.
>> Yeah, it's good. Uh, Secret Space Program slop is what it is, >> Cory. Dude, honestly though, of all the slop we could be ingesting, it's fun regularly subjected to.
>> Yeah.
>> Cosmic Disclosure slop.
>> Secret space program slop.
>> Yeah, it was great.
>> We've watched a lot of it. It's well produced. It's at least good.
>> Yeah. And it was crazy. It was the crazy stories we all want from someone like that.
>> Yeah. I think what kind of happened to kind of the ufology is the secret space program became such a big storyline that all these people just started yesanding each other >> and then Corey fell apart fell apart on the record and his story was [ __ ] on the record in a court of law.
>> So that kind of has really thrown in court of law.
>> Yeah. In a court of law on camera that we watched and it's really funny. uh that's really thrown a wrench in it and they've all kind of been scrambling since.
>> A lot of these guys are adjacent to all this [ __ ] like the Gaia Network or like the Skinwalker Ranch kind of Bigalow Foundation thing.
>> Well, they have to they kind of all have to Yes and each other because if one's lying, they're all probably lying.
>> Yeah, that's a good point. Yeah, >> that's where a lot of >> good ones. Yeah, >> a lot of our issue came with like when it came to um Alberino wasn't so much like he's got a bunch of crazy [ __ ] >> we've made up with. we made up with and I love dearly and he will be performing at or there's a rather a large card a life-sized cardboard cutout of him will be performing at Bohemian Grove and we're also going to do a a costume competition Alberto >> I'm going to see if I can get him to call in for the costume competition >> it would be nice to at least get him to video choose like whichever one his favorite is um >> perhaps this one >> but a lot of his ideas bleed into the Gaia Network [ __ ] and a lot of his ideas bleed into like [ __ ] that came out of Skinwalker Ranch which is like hey far be it from me to to challenge you on your crazy ideas, but when you're hanging out with like Alzando and you're smoking cigars with him and [ __ ] something strange like I start getting alarms going off because it's not like I think Alzando is this inherently nefarious character. I just see him as some wing of the government's useful idiot. Yeah, I I think that's what most of these guys are is they they are not necessarily with the exception of Cory Good, I think he's intentionally malicious, but most of these guys are not trying to [ __ ] things up.
>> There's not a lot of those guys intentionally malicious guys.
>> Yeah. Oblivious and they kind of don't know what's going on and someone much smarter than them is kind of them.
>> And if you're saying all this [ __ ] and you blow up, I'd be like, "Oh, [ __ ] I must be right. I'm [ __ ] killing it right now."
>> When you're making a million dollars a year.
>> Yeah. But David, you know, when he has two New York Times bestsellers, he's like, "I'm crushing."
>> Yeah. And he was on Ancient Aliens. He had a crazy career.
>> He had a hot wife and then >> and then Cory Good happened >> and then we uh we basically live commented a man's life falling apart. It which is >> pretty crazy in hindsight because we did it for so long.
>> Yeah. It's kind of uh it it will forever be our best work. I think >> it's look in terms of like you know the >> you would say that you would call this your opus magnum of >> in terms of the >> or magnum opus we might phrase it that way. Yeah we might say what do you say he used a magnum or >> Yeah. Oh, honestly, dude, I got to tell you 57 Opus Magnum.
>> Um, his his wife was very she's a very pretty lady and I mean, >> uh, that's a bummer, right? You're a guy who has it all.
A a large forehead, a beautiful wife.
Uh, >> you're on Ancient Aliens.
>> Ancient Aliens. Yeah, man. at at some point I think he came to terms with the idea that like it's not going to rectify it's not going to course correct like I think that's literally probably what drove him to this is I think he finally realized a lot of the stuff we had been saying was accurate and that like this stuff's not going to pan out it's not even real and I think he was so delusional for so long that having to confront the fact that he wasn't a Christ figure that he wasn't actually a prophet that he didn't invent zero point energy like I think all that kind started to hit him at once, >> which what a what a brutal I think I said this, what a brutal realization to come to.
>> Oh, yeah. It's got to be brutal.
>> You think you're talking to an archangel and you've sunk all of your money into a company you think is going to revolutionize how human society works.
>> Yeah.
>> And then you realize, oh [ __ ] I'm wrong.
>> It's honestly, it's impressive he lasted as long as he did.
>> You think that you're talking to an archangel and you're actually talking to a fed who runs a I I guess a a [ __ ] hypno op on the side.
>> That's crazy. That is a bummer, dude.
>> Yeah, it's a rough day in every guy's life when you realize you're not Jesus Christ. That's Yeah, that's a rough thing, dude.
>> That's the same thing with uh with David Ike, honestly. Like David Ike is doing a lot of the exact same [ __ ] he used to say. It's funny. They run the same >> MO They run the same MO on these people.
Uh David Ike used to proclaim that he was the son of God, that he was Jesus.
And um and and then throughout his career, whatever you'd like to call it, he's been in contact with ancient, you know, Atlantean masters.
>> That's what we're that's what we're supposed to be doing. Like we should set up a ministry. You know, how they help like uh kids on crack and [ __ ] like that.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> We should set up a >> I heard that's a Jewish only found.
Yeah. That's the one that helps them smoke more cracks.
like a foundation where we could like take in uh former >> public figures, new age people, ufologist.
>> I would love that. What the [ __ ] would we do with them?
>> I don't know. Put them in a halfway house or something like that.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Make them improv group. Yeah. Make a real podcast.
>> What about them all together and have them remote view for us?
>> That like go and see what our ops are up to.
>> Uh so you guys are all trying to do something practical. I want to do Come Town with [ __ ] alien guys. Honestly, that if if David Wilco >> Make him do bits.
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. All right. Think about that. He's dead now, so obviously this isn't going to happen. But David Wilcock, David Ike, Steven Greer, strictly in a comedy setting.
>> Yes.
>> Funny [ __ ] >> Oh, yeah. Come on.
>> Another thing with all these people is they all [ __ ] hate everyone else in the alien field, which always makes their conversations kind of inherently entertaining.
>> You could you could do Real Housewives of ufology. Yeah, they all [ __ ] They all hate each other. They are all very catty [ __ ] What's this? Sam hides his fish tank.
>> Fish tank and it's a house full of these [ __ ] >> I'd love to do that. I'd love to do that. That would be great. Now, the problem is they're all too soft to like suffer a little. They're all really really babies about it.
>> Yeah, they they've been too pampered.
>> Yeah, once once again, David's starvation and poverty was like, I can't get bison steaks anymore.
>> Yes, he was still making $3,000. So, how long into this process before Steven Greer holds one down and gorilla [ __ ] them?
>> 10 minutes.
>> Honestly, that's what isn't that what we'd be hoping for? That's our final.
>> Yeah, I'm saying. But then >> clip farming.
>> I just got that would be the climactic season finale and not first episode 20 minutes in. [ __ ] >> That's the pilot. That's the pilot episode. Honestly, that's how you get hooked, right? Who's this guy going to gorilla [ __ ] next?
>> Exactly. He goes through the whole cast and the finale is he finishes them off.
Yeah.
>> Yeah. Then he [ __ ] them he [ __ ] them all in one orgy. Honestly, I don't think you could you could stop him. I mean, you know, not David Ike couldn't stop him. David Ike would fold. I mean, there's no he would crumble underneath the sheer mass. Oh, yeah. He'd have to.
>> That's what I say about David Ike. Very easy to [ __ ] in the butt.
>> Real bubble. Real bubble butt. That's what I say about a [ __ ] fatty on him.
>> I think even David Wilcock would have been a little a little feisty. He would have fought back a little bit. He probably would have cried a lot. And that's one thing I will say. I don't think David Ike could cry.
>> David would definitely cry, but he would kind of like it.
>> Yeah, David uh when he told his stories, he actually didn't like being raped. He was kind of against it. He thought it was a bad thing to happen to him. So, I think he would have thought.
>> Now, he did he did cry when talking about making love to women.
>> Yes, he did say seeing women naked physically ill.
>> It made him sick. No.
>> Oh, >> it made him throw up. Yeah.
>> Did he say that?
>> Yes, he did. Yes, he did. So, Amen.
>> Yes. In one of his past lives, and this is one this is one of my favorite ones.
In one of his past lives, he was the wife of a Japanese fishmonger >> who was an alcoholic that beat him regularly.
>> Yeah. And he just yearns for that again.
>> Well, so this guy, he would go on his fishing trip. So he'd come back and he'd have sex with David the geisha. But he said in those book he's like he wouldn't even wash before he [ __ ] me. So just this guy who smelled like fish was [ __ ] me. You know, we had a guy on the show recently. His name was uh Seth Kicklighter. And Seth, he smelled like fish.
>> He smelled like fish. And uh so he has this really fascinating theory that, you know, all this like astral projection, remote viewing, past life regression [ __ ] is all these are generated experiences and >> um that they actually require energy to uh generate which is why you get that DMT lockout thing where people are like they won't let me back in the DMT realm.
It's because you're not evangelizing.
you're not going forth and spreading.
You're just showing up and wasting basically server space, right, by by not going and and spreading this word.
>> Um, and I just think that it's crazy that somebody might have been generating >> I hate that the spirit realm takes like credits.
>> I love that. That's actually fantastic.
And somebody is dumping credits in to turn David Ike into a geisha so that he could be forced upon by a sweaty fish mongle. I mean, that's that's incredible.
>> They they've monetized heaven. And I don't know how to tell you this, but it's a paper play.
>> They've monetized the >> indulgences were kind of right.
>> They were pretty on the money. You just didn't. Look, they said you're not going to own anything and you'll like it. That includes heaven.
>> We're going to eat the bugs. You're going to be a geisha who gets [ __ ] by uh fisherman and you're going to like it.
>> Epstein was in charge of like uh >> microtransaction >> microtransactions in Call of Duty.
>> Micro penises.
>> Microtransactions in Second Heaven.
>> That's crazy.
>> That's perfect. I I I think that the more I talk about it and the more I think through this process, David Wilcock was certainly this is the thing that we're not talking about a whole lot. We talk about all the mistakes he's made. We're not talking about the fact that there he was clearly targeted and he was targeted by by a system of experiences that probably would would [ __ ] up pretty much anybody. Um cuz I just don't think he wasn't having these experiences. I just don't think they were real, >> right? You know what I mean? Part of it, the even more perverse part of it is a lot of the people kind of wormed their way into his inner circle.
>> I think they were trying to scare him and tell them, you know, people are coming after you, all this [ __ ] They wanted, it was kind of like a cult leader thing where they wanted David to have to rely on them. Those are the ones who eventually talked him out of his job.
>> They also wanted him isolated because he isolated himself for years on end, which was clearly not good for >> you. You would call him a talent, right?
>> Yeah, >> of course. Absolutely. on camera talent 100%.
>> So I I think like he was the ultimate mark. Like there were endless amounts of intelligence operatives having a field day with him. Like he was the chick that gets passed around a hip-hop party. You know what I mean? Like he was a video vixen.
>> Yeah. He all the big head >> all the big UFO whistleblowers out there, all of them eventually made their way to David cuz he'd buy anything.
>> Yes. He literally would believe any story. And that I think was ultimately his downfall. But but they started telling him like, you know, his brakes have been cut [ __ ] a hundred times.
>> I think he cried about that a couple times on stream.
>> Yeah. Well, he cried, you know, he also >> the fact that they were cut or the the fact that he was made to believe they were cut.
>> No, that they were cut. David never questioned anything. He thought everything was happening.
>> No, he also thought I think he called into pro.
>> He could verify that like he can go and look.
>> You could, but he didn't.
>> Well, my that was another good bit. He used to keep a hammer in his car.
>> Yeah.
>> In case someone cut his brakes so he could break the window and jump out of the car.
>> That was David's solution.
>> Brakes cut.
>> Not not just open the door. Not just open the door.
>> Does they would have remotely done it and locked you in.
>> Right. So his idea his idea was you need to break the window and jump out of the window.
>> He never saw it. He never saw it coming that in fact the plan was to get him to >> shoot himself in the face with >> Yeah.
>> Better irony. Ironically, I mean, look, not as good a story. It would have been much cooler if he died. Someone hacked his car and he jumped out the window.
>> Especially the brakes cutting thing. He called in to Carrie Cassidy and he said the way to like prevent himself from dying is he needed like more likes and retweets. He needed more eyeballs on him and that's what keeps the deep state from killing him. That is true. That's what we're going to do. That's what we're going to do now. It's the only way for >> Oh. to to put a magnifying lens on him to to thwart the deep state. Well, they're going to come for us, I think. I I expect >> Well, I suspect someone will dig this because once again, there's two storylines that are going to keep playing out, which is Stavati and Corey.
Good, but I assume someone else will dig this up probably. And there's just I mean, there's just so many episodes.
>> If they do kill you guys, I would hope that it's at uh Bohemian Grove >> just because it would be I mean, unbelievable. Last time we did Bohemian Grove, we bombed Iran.
>> Oh, no. Israel bombed Iran. bombed and really impe and I go, "How do we how do we one up that?
>> How do we top the race rally that we did last time? I'll get Dimeag Daryl on the [ __ ] stage."
>> That's what I'm saying, dude.
>> That would be incredible. Um, >> that would go viral as hell.
>> I've got a big head, too. I I bet there's a bunch of [ __ ] stuff in there that'd make a very a nice spectacle for someone to blow my brain.
>> There's a lot of matter. Yeah.
>> I'm I'm betting we can say this and then by the time Bohemian Grove rolls around, like we'll all have forgotten about it.
So, I could say this now and not spoil anything.
>> I'm nervous.
>> But if we just have a couple of people in the audience with um >> laser pointers uh hit the guys in the chest with them.
>> That's such a bad idea to even say.
>> No. Yeah. Let's Let's Dude, let's clip farm. Let's fake our death and post it on the internet.
>> Alien style.
>> You could just put that up and we'll do the soundboard the >> and then we'll just hit the ground with some ketchup.
>> Yeah.
>> Oh my god. What if we pulled off a super convincing like we disturbed the whole >> Everyone was like >> That'd be so sick.
>> That'd be sick as hell, dude. Let's do that. Let's fake our death.
>> Honestly, that would be great.
>> Think about that. Like if I if I did die, the the community of people that watch this show would not let it go.
>> Oh no. For everything.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's again once he ruined for me because look at what people are going to do in your name when you're gone.
>> They just can't. Yeah.
>> They're [ __ ] >> They They're using dowsing rods to prove what you were doing. That is actually what we've done here is we've created a situation where we just can't die >> because if we do there's there's no version of our deaths natural or otherwise >> that would not result in a cascade of conspiracy theories which I would be smitten with from the afterlife. I'd go look at him go.
>> Oh, it'd be sick. It'd be so cool. Dude, >> there's so many [ __ ] people who will just I've seen people So David's friend had to put out a video where he was talking Jude. His friend Jude put out a video to talk about how David took his own life, >> but the people in the comments have decided Jude is a government operative.
He's David's family and Jude are lying about what happened, so everyone should harass them because they're bad people who lie. But uh yeah, there's there are just people who refuse to accept reality and they will literally concoct whatever storyline they need to in order to make things fit in the plot they have. That's the beauty of it is you guys therefore could still cover Will [ __ ] every Monday by just covering what new conspiracy theories there are about him.
>> That's honestly we might just start watching his old videos and pretend they're new because everybody's too stupid to know the difference.
>> That's true. You could say he's uploading them by, you know, a different name. In fact, you could make a profile.
>> I'll just I'll become a VTuber, but my my model will be David Wilcott.
>> I'll just dress like him and start doing the show.
>> Yeah, we'll just impersonate him. Would you guys be able to like program an AI to uh like replicate what David would say and do?
>> Probably. He's definitely got enough content. If you fed him to like Grock or something, I'm I'm sure you could.
>> There's thousands of hours of David on uh >> We have multiple sound banks.
>> Yes, we have. We have lots of >> Robo David. Is that was his name? Or >> David Wilbot.
>> David Wilbot. That's right.
>> That's him calling his turkeys.
>> He loved his turkeys, man. The poor turkeys. Who's going to feed them?
>> It's overwhelming. If you type in Willock uh over and over again, it's he did not commit.
>> This is a lie. This is like over Yeah.
By the way, did you guys know that your last stream that you ended, you know, about him uh was >> three three hours and 33 minutes.
>> That was intentional.
>> That was intentional. That was his honor.
>> We didn't actually enter trying to do that, but someone pointed out after the three hour mark that like you guys could do that and that was a good idea. So, we did.
I mean, that is a good idea. I I I really enjoy that.
>> I wish we could take credit for it.
>> Over and over again, people are like, "No, he did not himself."
>> It's I I mean, you got to look at this from the perspective of the people in his audience. Like, we know David had a lot of inaccurate ideas, but for the people in his audience, he was legitimately like a profound spiritual teacher. Yeah. And I and I can't imagine how difficult it must be to have some guy you rely on for spiritual advice and then you go to listen to him and the next week it's like, "Oh yeah, your spiritual teacher uh [ __ ] swallowed it in front of the police."
>> His final lesson.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Don't don't listen to this.
>> What is he trying to teach us? I don't understand the message here. Uh I guess I have some like real question. Um what happens to the YouTube page? It's always so strange when somebody dies and their social media is like >> right about.
>> Yeah.
>> So his his friend Jude is going to try and kind of get hold of David's works to kind of archive it. And Jude >> Jude started a YouTube channel called Deep Spice. And I think he's going to be doing uh like a stream every week with >> he doesn't he doesn't have the sauce, but his audience is [ __ ] enough that they'll probably enjoy it. Yeah, I think I think Well, they need these people legitimately need like some sort of grieving group to go.
>> Yeah, you got to fill that hole now.
There's a there's a power vacuum.
>> Well, they're like dogs when you leave.
>> There's a for here you go. Uh Makavelli on on Twitter posted a thing and he goes, uh David Wilcock uh absolutely did not commit.
>> He was [ __ ] killed by the Jews.
>> He was killed by the [ __ ] Jews. So, it's just like, you know, there's no way. There's no way you're going to this thing has taken off and there's no amount of like slowing it down anymore.
>> That's our David Jew button, by the way.
>> Jew that goes off into >> Yes. But, uh, he people just took it and ran with it for whatever their pet conspiracy is. If you're one of the scientist guys, you made him a scientist. If the Jews are responsible for everything, he was killed by a Jew.
really whatever it was, people just kind of took him and just plugged it in. I I don't think anyone did. Well, no one did any [ __ ] research.
>> David said a lot of [ __ ] Okay. If you want >> if you want to clip one or two things, he had to fill a lot of time every week.
>> He did 3 hours and 33 minutes every single week. Yeah. Oh my god. Really?
That's how long his streams always were?
If not more. They used to be like 6 hours.
>> Yeah. 90% of it was absolute [ __ ] dog [ __ ] but still did three and a half hours every single week. But that 10% >> Yeah, >> that 10% was good.
>> Not so much in the last year, but you know, years ago.
>> Yeah, >> that when he used to do a decent show, >> the last year's been >> Do you think it's insensitive um during our performance at Bohemian Grove?
Because for we we talked off air, but for the audience who's listening, uh you guys are actually going to join us for our Neft to America performance. So, right now, we're hoping that uh Frank from quite frankly can join us and he's going to present us our topics and then, you know, we're gonna have a discussion on this. Um, and I'm thinking, you know, maybe we should spend a little extra money. Life-size cardboard cutout of David Wilco.
That would be a great honor. I think he would very much appreciate it.
>> I'm a star.
>> Yeah, that's all he ever wanted. He just wanted to be the world's most famous man of all time and the richest man of all time.
>> Humble, humble goals.
>> Look, for one day, he was the biggest name on the internet.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's still going on, man. It's still going on. I just find it kind of remarkable that he's not a scientist and that he was concerned about the scientists going missing and he the way he framed it was like worried about my own safety like well you're not a >> Right.
>> So after after Charlie Kirk got killed he seemed to have convinced himself that they were trying to kill him too.
>> Yes.
>> So it didn't matter who died. No, David made we called it the David centric model of the universe is whatever happened it was actually David was the most important person in it and he would twist the story and make it about >> well it's David David Charlie Kirk Alex Jones you know they were all in trouble >> to be somewhat serious I I think David literally tried to set up his death to be a conspiracy because before he actually shot himself he fired a shot when the cops were there so I think he might have been trying to do a cop thing.
>> Oh, that didn't that would have been like they came for me and it was a firefight and >> he was trying to do like the Bill Cooper I think because if he gets gunned down by the police this the conspiracy >> different story.
It's going crazy.
>> Honestly, if he gets gunned down by the police, I feel like your your mindset might have changed a little bit.
>> Oh, we would have been we would have been scot-free just lock my phone away for a week.
>> Oh, that stream would have been tasteless on Saturday.
Oh, it would have been gross.
>> Well, by many people's uh standards, it seemed to have been quite tasteless. I was going through that that Reddit, man, and they were just >> Oh, yeah.
>> They were not fans.
>> I did. At least I cried during the stream. I figured that proves my sincerity.
>> Yeah.
>> Well, people have a real problem with that is they don't understand the the comedy thing. Um, and they think that just by virtue of making fun of something means that you >> you hate it. you hate it. I'm like, "No, dude. I make fun of everything. It's actually, I think, a survival mechanism."
>> And um and I make fun of the people that I care about the most the most. Right.
So, >> by that measurement, you guys really cared about David.
>> You have to bore an inordinate amount of attention to something in order to accurately portray it as hilarious.
>> Yeah. So, like there's a level of respect there. It's almost worship.
>> There's our patron say, "I'm going to put him on a candle like the Mexican."
>> Yeah. the little Mother Mary candles.
There's no way we could have done what we did if we didn't actually love watching his show every week.
>> I think we even said like, I wouldn't do this every week if I didn't enjoy it.
David's [ __ ] funny, >> dude. I loved watching David cuz he would say crazy [ __ ] and it was really entertaining. There's no way we do that for seven straight years if we think he's awful.
>> Yeah. Well, I mean, that's what, you know, I hope people go back and watch his other videos cuz he was genuinely one of the funniest people on the internet.
>> Also very interesting. Yeah, because well interesting and funny because he was like he was going insane, but he basically live documented thinking he was about to be a trillionaire and talking to an archangel and then it all then it all came crashing down at the end. It's that's why the scientist thing is so [ __ ] because no, his story is actually so human and tragic in that he just kind of went insane and lost his mind.
>> It's kind of like this great psychological spectacle to just track his downfall from 2019 till last week where Yes. It's like some [ __ ] Dadsky novel.
>> Yeah. When we started, he was just like the the weird UFO guy. It was kind of funny because people would because he'd open every show going, "No, I'm not on cocaine. I'm just It's just hot."
>> He said that.
>> He said that every single live show he would do. He would explain for way on cocaine.
>> Well, it it was his opener because it crushed mostly it. He might have >> but more importantly, it crushed every time he did it. So he did that every live show, but that was what he started as and then it just it really >> became whatever the [ __ ] we were watching.
>> It really morphed into something else there.
>> But what it didn't well it was all real though. It was you're really watching >> an unbelievable drama unfold uh in a man's life that ends honestly. I mean you know >> if it's a movie you go short of him actually unveiling zero point technology >> this there's only one way that this end >> this is the way that this ends. Yeah.
It's way western man. You know, I I I have a recommendation at Bohemian Grove.
We're going to have, you know, a big section for merch. You know, I'd love for you guys to bring your stuff and and we have somebody that's handling the merch there. So, they'll sell your stuff. They'll keep all the money. They won't give you any. Uh, no, that's not true. They are gonna So, it would be cool.
>> Jewish, right?
>> Yeah.
>> If you uh Freemason Yeah. Um, >> white Jewish.
>> Yeah. I mean, yeah. Um, if you guys did that candle thing.
>> Oh, yeah. Maybe we'll try and figure it out. Maybe.
>> I don't think it's that hard. You just need to Photoshop his face onto one of those things and then get it printed on a candle.
>> Oh, I'm going to Was it uh Mother Mary from Fatima? He loved that story.
>> He did love He did.
>> Of course he [ __ ] did. Divine.
>> He loved that story.
>> I think he big divine feminine guy, huh?
>> Oh, yeah. He loved the girls.
>> He might have been one of those children in a life. Not sexually, but >> No, no, no. He loved this the the female energy, but he loved uh penis, you know.
>> Yes. Way more than vagina.
>> Yeah. He he loved the concept of being a manly man, but I think he primarily uh repressed his sexuality so much it drove him insane. I think >> remember when he remember when he came out in his wife's bathrobe?
>> Yeah. There was a It was very bizarre.
Sexy.
>> But it was it was well after they had been divorced.
>> Yeah. No, not during their marriage. He just started a stream and he's like, "I'm wearing her clothes."
>> Again, people said he wasn't [ __ ] mentally.
>> We had no idea there was something wrong.
>> Yeah. Just >> Well, I mean, overwhelmingly I, you know, I know you guys are saying one thing, but if you go online, everybody else is saying there were no signs. He said he was happy. Everything was good.
>> We're lying Jews, so no one can listen to what we have to say.
>> We work for the feds.
>> Dan Bonino put us up to this director.
>> Yeah. This his final act.
>> Yeah. By the way, he's going to be at Bohemian Grove as well. Um >> Oh, good. Are we gonna have a bugeyed competition because he'll win?
>> No, it's going to be a karate fight, actually.
>> So, well, I want to play this video, but I want to play it as the outro. So, um uh let's bring this in for a landing because you guys made a whole tribute video.
>> Yeah.
>> 3 minutes and 33 seconds.
>> No, I was going to, but it would have been dead air and I had to stop watching it cuz it was making me cry.
>> We We have legitimately been so [ __ ] sad. It's been awful, dude. really buming me out and I had to just stop watching it.
>> Well, um All right. So, I'm excited to watch this then. Fantastic. Uh before we do this, because this is going to be how we close the show, let's remind everybody where they can find your work and uh and and and they can judge for themselves about whether or not you guys actually hated Albert. I'm sorry.
>> Freudian slip. Um David Wilco.
>> No, we listen, man. We have a signed copy of his book. Like, this is done.
We're squashed it. Yeah. We're not going back. No matter what you say.
>> We got David's books, too.
>> Yeah. We We wish we had a chance to watch this. You can find us uh >> until the video.
>> Well, something got squashed.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Oh, no.
>> Uh you can find our videos uh YouTube, uh Hidden Plainsight Radio. Soon enough, it'll be in the evidence file of the Boulder Police. Uh Hidden Plainsight Radio on Instagram. We are at the HiddenPod on Twitter. He is Brandon Stillhidden on Twitter.
patreon.com/hiddenplainsightpod where we watch random movies and TV shows and just talk [ __ ] >> Yeah, >> that's nice. I like that. That's a real laid-back thing. That's why I want to do that, like I said, on the Patreon above Majestic. Maybe we'll invite the guys.
>> Yeah, that'll be fun.
>> It's a really good documentary. All right. Well, let's uh let we we'll we'll catch you guys after the show and we're gonna play this uh this
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